{"id":615,"date":"2005-10-15T12:48:21","date_gmt":"2005-10-15T16:48:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.eprup.com\/ica\/?p=615"},"modified":"2023-06-14T18:09:07","modified_gmt":"2023-06-14T22:09:07","slug":"comparing-education-paradox-chinese-student","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.icainstitute.org\/roundtable-discussions\/comparing-education-paradox-chinese-student\/","title":{"rendered":"Comparing Education: The Paradox of the Chinese Student"},"content":{"rendered":"

Summary of ICA Institute Study Group held on October 15, 2005
\nYear published: 2005<\/p>\n

Discussion leader:
\nDr. Robert DeHaan, Senior Science Advisor Division of Educational Studies, Emory University Atlanta, GA USA<\/p>\n

Introduction<\/h3>\n

Current research suggests that conventional teaching methods have to be revamped as the world economy becomes more connected. What has recent research revealed about how teaching should be done as opposed to the current method? In what way<\/p>\n

do cultural, historical and ethnic differences affect how that research is applied in India, China and the U.S.?<\/p>\n

Statistics on Chinese Education<\/h3>\n

There are many more teachers in China than in the U.S. at the elementary and middle school level. This number drops in high school because education at that level is not mandatory. It is common for high school age individuals to be working full-time in China.<\/p>\n

At the college level, China is behind. There are two times as many higher education institutions in the U.S. as in China. China\u2019s GER (percentage of college-age people that could be enrolled in college who are actually in college) is 16% while American GER is 37%. Since China started engaging with the world economy, it has seen the need to have a highly educated workforce to be able to compete. To this end, the government has enacted policies that invest in higher education. For example, money is being spent on private universities to give more options to students. Also, China has encouraged the immigration of students to other countries to be educated. Accordingly, the rate of increase in enrollment dwarfs that of the U.S: U.S. 1.5% per year, China 25% per year.<\/p>\n

Discussion Points<\/h3>\n

The dynamics of education in China points to a socially-engineered system very dependent on government policies. The country operates like a business enterprise, dependent on supply and demand. This means that when the economy requires blue-collar workers and factories in particular regions, the government discourages higher education as unnecessary. Likewise, when the economy suggests that more technocrats are needed, then science education is encouraged as well as language skills like English and Japanese.<\/p>\n

In the last few years China has produced nine times as many engineers as the U.S. However, the quality of those engineers is questionable, rising from the fact that course equivalence studies show that coursework could be inferior to those in developed nations. The Ministry of Education in China is aware of these problems and has suggestions about the root causes of this perceived inferiority. The ministry has pointed to problems such as:<\/p>\n